Unreliable Defense
St. Paul, MN – Usually their biggest strength, the Minnesota Wild’s defensive play has become unreliable at the wrong time and it’s threatening to keep them from a third straight postseason berth.
Facing an offensively challenged Northwest Division rival might help them get back on track as they host the Colorado Avalanche on Tuesday night.
Oddsmakers from Online Sportsbook SPORTSBETTING.COM have made the Wild –170 money line favorites for Tuesday’s game against the Avalanche. Current NHL Public Betting Information shows that 72% of more than 205 bets for this game have been placed on the Wild -170.
After allowing an average of 2.29 goals through its first 59 contests, Minnesota (32-29-8) has given up 3.40 per game in its last 10, losing eight and dropping into a 10th-place tie with St. Louis in the Western Conference.
The Blues handed the Wild their latest loss by scoring three power-play goals in the first 28:08 en route to a 5-3 win Sunday. Niklas Backstrom was pulled after two periods for Josh Harding, and the Wild cut into a 4-1 deficit with two goals in the third but couldn’t get the equalizer.
"We need to be a bit more desperate out there," Backstrom told the team’s official Web site. "We need to be hungry for the puck. It’s like the playoffs out there. We have to make in now, or, soon, it’s going to be too late."
Backstrom posted a 2.20 goals-against average through his first 50 starts and got a four-year, $24 million extension March 3. In his last nine appearances, however, he’s 2-3-3 with a 3.46 GAA.
If Backstrom starts Tuesday, he would seem to have a good chance to bounce back against the Avalanche, whom he’s dominated in his career. His best effort during his slump came Thursday night when he made 40 saves in a 2-1 shootout loss at home to Colorado, and he’s 10-2-2 with a 2.08 GAA in 14 games against the Avs.
He beat Colorado 2-0 with 33 saves on Jan. 4 at the Pepsi Center.
Colorado has climbed out of the West cellar despite dropping eight of its last 11, but has scored fewer than three goals eight times during that span.
Peter Budaj’s goaltending has been one of the lone bright spots of late for the Avalanche (31-38-1), who appear headed for their first last-place finish since moving from Quebec for the 1995-96 season. Colorado is nine points behind the Wild, the next-closest team in the Northwest.
Budaj started the season 16-25-1 with a 3.03 GAA but has won three of his last four starts, allowing six goals. He shut out Minnesota over the final 49:45 of regulation in Thursday’s win and stopped two shootout attempts to improve to 8-7-2 with a 2.77 GAA against the Wild.
Budaj followed with a 3-2 win Saturday night in Edmonton but sat the next night in Vancouver as Andrew Raycroft allowed three goals in the first 15:18 of a 4-2 defeat.
"Right now, it’s playing for pride," said defenseman John-Michael Liles, who assisted on both Avalanche goals Sunday. "We’re playing for pride and playing for each other, and that’s all you can focus on right now. In the first period, we didn’t have that mentality."
Minnesota is 7-1-2 in its last 10 regular-season meetings with Colorado.
Did you like this article? Subscribe to our Hockey news feed for the fastest updates delivered right to you – Click here to Subscribe
Posted: 3/17/09 1:00AM ET